Police used tear gas to disperse hundreds of migrants and encourage them to move out of the city centre.
A non-profit organisation working to help migrants without housing said that they would file a complaint with the police inspector general and continue their fight.
“The violence this evening is abject but we must not pretend that it is just happening now,” the organisation Solidarité Migrants Wilson wrote in response to Darmanin’s tweet, stating that it came after six days of police chasing migrants.
Related:French police dismantle 2,000 strong migrant camp near Paris
“The repeated use of law enforcement for such operations, under such conditions with a lack of a coherent public policy is nonsense. It defies understanding. It is counterproductive, utterly ineffective, expensive,” said Pierre Henry, the director of a non-profit organisation called France Fraternités.
The Paris police said in a statement that the creation of “such encampments by some associations is not acceptable” and confirmed that they dismantled the “illegal occupation of public space.”
Just last week, police dismantled an illegal migrant camp housing 2,000 people in Saint-Denis outside of Paris. The majority of the migrants were men from Afghanistan, Sudan, Ethiopia and Somalia.
Police said that since last week at least 3,000 people had been sheltered through officially dedicated centres.
Police have said that people in a regular situation need to be directed to the appropriate places and people in an irregular situation need to leave.
The incident comes as Europe prepares to revamp its response to the migrant situation, focussing more on deporting people who do not have the right to seek asylum.
Watch Niall O’Reilly’s report in the media player above.